This module offers guidelines for leading an effective research team and is authored by Susan Margulies (University of Pennsylvania).
Are lab directors leaders or managers?
Leader
Manager
Leader influences opinions and attitudes of other to accomplish a shared goal
Manager makes sure people and processes are in place to achieve goals. Develops plans, oversees budgets and resources, organizes, solves problems
Rule #1 Lab Directors must be Leaders AND Managers
If I had one piece of advice to give it’s that although you’ve been hired for your scientific skills and research potential, your eventual success will depend heavily on your ability to guide, lead, and empower others to do their best work. --Thomas Cech, HHMI
Lab Director Role = Vision + Relationships + Tasks
Developing a vision or mission statement
What A summary of goals and inspirations
Why A clearly stated vision inspires, and sets a course for the lab
Goal Create a distinct future that distinguishes your lab from your competitors
How
Describe the kind of research you want to do
Motivation for your research
Atmosphere, Values: scientific excellence, teamwork?
Historical and current challenges
Short- and long-term goals
Tie into departmental or institutional culture
Directing and motivating people
Behavior
Directive Behaviors tell people what to do and how to do it, when to do it, and then monitor closely
Supportive Behaviors listen, provide encouragement and assistance, facilitate their involvement in problem-solving and decision-making
Lab Directors must provide BOTH - behavior type depends on lab member’s level of competence and commitment.
Rule #2 Delegate those activities that someone else could provide both direction and support
Communication
Be accessible
Daily time in the lab
Open office door
Weekly lab meetings (presentations, progress reports)
Small group meetings (technical issues, alt. approaches)
One-on-one meetings
Journal club (teach good/bad exp design, analysis, reporting)
Strategy sessions (new directions)
Group lab activities in non-work setting to build team spirit
Rule #3 Make sure you reserve time to be alone to think, read, and write!
Give and receive feedback
Timely
Specific
Objective
Reinforces expectations
Constructive
Make decisions
in isolation
after consultation
as a group
allow others to make the decision (only if can you live with the outcome!)
Set rules of behavior for lab members
Work hours (focus on productivity) (your hours set the pace!)
Vacations and maternity leaves
Authorship guidelines
Scientific ethics
Project ownership
Projects leaving the lab (fund 6 mo independent research?)
Rule #4 They’re watching…always watching!
State rules, be a role model, and be consistent and fair.
Motivate the lab
Importance of vision statement
Recognize and appreciate each person’s contributions
Make sure lab members understand their role
Provide training, recognize progress
Manage conflict
Assess the problem, each person’s interests, acknowledge constraints, encourage parties to participate in resolution
Managing projects
What Allocating, using and tracking resources to to achieve a goal in a desired timeframe
publishing a paper, getting a grant, tenure
Why Reduce wasted effort, track progress, respond quickly to hurdles
How
Define distinct steps to goal&expected time to complete
Who does what, when? (1-2 wk blocks) (sequential or parallel?)
Identify constraints, necessary collaborations, supplies, equipment, resources
Anticipate bottlenecks (pair post-doc with UG, have technician work out and revise new methods)
Track work closely (lab meetings, use clear indicators (“blots are done”))
Implement contingency plans
Maintain team focus and motivation (communicate project vision)
When do i learn to do all of that?
What relevant Lab Director skills do you have already?
Ability to gather and analyze data use it to analyze situations in the lab
Organizational ability use it to organize your time, resources, and manage projects
Resilience and persistence you will make mistakes
Honesty and Integrity will guide you in directing your lab
Communication skills
Resources
At The Helm: A Laboratory Navigator by K. Barker
Making the Right Moves: A Practical Guide to Scientific Management for Post-docs and New Faculty by L. Bonnetta (HHMI)